Related articles

The poll comes after a series of violent attacks on Donald Trump supporters.

In April this year, a Trump supporter was attacked in a restaurant near Dupont Circle in Northwest DC.

According to the police report, the 29-year-old victim named Maricela said she overheard a conversation between two female suspects and their male friend.

She said she became involved in their conversation and said she supported Trump.

Speaking to Fox 5, Maricela said: “I’m a Trump supporter. I stood by my views, then they called me a racist and then they started attacking me.”

More Democrats think a second war is imminent than Republicans (Image: GETTY)

More Democrats think a second war is imminent than Republicans, with 37 percent and 32 percent respectively.

And 26 percent of voters not affiliated with either major party think a civil war is at hand.

The level of concern is about the same among Republicans, Democrats and unaffiliated voters in regards to the threat of violence from those critical of the media’s coverage of Trump.

Women and those under 40 are more worried about a civil war than men and older voters are.

In terms of race, 44 percent of blacks think a second civil war is likely compared to 28 percent of whites and 36 percent of other minority voters.

Only 40 percent think the US would be better off if Hillary Clinton had been elected (Image: GETTY)

White people are also less concerned about political violence than the others are.

There have been a number of reports of violence against black Donald Trump supporters.

In May this year, employees at a Cheesecake Factory in Miami, Florida, verbally attacked and made threatening gestures toward a black man dining with his girlfriend’s family for wearing a "Make America Great Again" hat.

According to multiple witnesses, a woman approached the man, pointed to his hat to signal other employees to approach the table.

At that point a dozen or so people began making comments about the hat, saying they wanted to punch him in the face and some allege some of the employees referred to the man as a “n**ger”.

Protesters break through security in Davos to march against Trump

Wed, January 24, 2018

Anti-capitalists marched through Swiss cities to protest a planned visit by U.S. President Donald Trump to the World Economic Forum and broke through a security cordon in Davos

People rally as they protest against the attendance of the US president to the upcoming Davos World Economic Forum

Voters who think the country is divided has jumped from 50 percent before Trump’s inauguration to 55 percent.

But 42 percent of voters say the country is headed in the right direction, as opposed to a figure which ran in the mid to upper 20 percent range for most weeks during the last year of Obama’s premiership.

Also, 51 percent of voters agree with Wisconsin Democratic gubernatorial candidate Matt Flynn that his party is “pickled in politics and victimology”.

Only 40 percent think the US would be better off if Hillary Clinton had been elected president in 2016.

The survey of 1,000 likely voters was conducted on June 21 and 24, 2018 by Rasmussen Reports.

The margin of error is +/- 3 percentage points with a 95 percent level of confidence.